This test was written to make sure *something* sane is generated, not
to test any ABI's signedness semantics.
This should allow the test to pass if AArch64 is the default target.
llvm-svn: 174618
This can yield dramatic speedups of dynamic_cast for simple inheritance trees,
at least with libsupc++. Neither libcxxabi nor libcxxrt make use of this
hint currently, it was never implemented because clang didn't support it.
There was some concern about the number of class hierarchy walks this change
introduces. If it turns out to be an issue we can add caching either at the cast
pair level or even deeper, but we also do a lot of walks in Sema so this
codepath is probably fairly optimized already.
llvm-svn: 174293
- Relax a expression for arm-gnueabi.
- Exclude msvc to limit target triplets to add limited a few targets.
Feel free to remove actions if guys thought they redundant.
llvm-svn: 174278
designator" diagnostic with more correct and more human-friendly "cannot take
address of rvalue of type 'T'".
For the case of & &T::f, provide a custom diagnostic, rather than unhelpfully
saying "cannot take address of rvalue of type '<overloaded function type>'".
For the case of &array_temporary, treat it just like a class temporary
(including allowing it as an extension); the existing diagnostic wording
for the class temporary case works fine.
llvm-svn: 174262
This addresses several (not all) debug info tests that use explicit metadata
numbers. Wherever the same number appeared more than once in a test I used
a named match to ensure the same number appeared in all those cases (this may
still be overly constraining test cases as they may not have actually cared
about that relationship). For one-off numbers I just replaced them with an
unnamed regex.
This may underconstrain poorly written test cases that were interested in
checking that certain metadata nodes were related but didn't actually match
on all the related nodes numbers.
llvm-svn: 174247
r173593 made us a little too eager to associate all code at the end of a
function with the user-written 'return' line. This caused problems with
breakpoints as they'd be set in exception handling code preceeding the
actual non-exception return handling code, leading to the breakpoint never
being hit in non-exceptional execution.
This change restores the pre-r173593 exception handling line information where
the cleanup code is associated with the '}' not the return line.
llvm-svn: 174206
In cooperation with the LLVM patch, this should implement all scalar front-end
parts of the C and C++ ABIs for AArch64.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174055
Title: [PR9027] volatile struct bug: member is not loaded at -O;
This is caused by last flag passed to @llvm.memcpy being false,
not honoring that aggregate has at least one 'volatile' data member
(even though aggregate itself has not been qualified as 'volatile'.
As a result, optimization optimizes away the memcpy altogether.
Patch review by John MaCall (I still need to fix up a test though).
llvm-svn: 173535
never key functions. We did not implement that rule for the
iOS ABI, which was driven by what was implemented in gcc-4.2.
However, implement it now for other ARM-based platforms.
llvm-svn: 173515
with -target i686-win32, you will see;
debug-info-static-member.cpp:11:22: error: in-class initializer for static data member of type 'const float' requires 'constexpr' specifier [-Wstatic-float-init]
const static float const_b = 3.14;
^ ~~~~
constexpr
llvm-svn: 173418
Looks like r161368 fixed this for one case but not all. This change generalizes
the solution over all the unwrapping cases. Now that preserving the qualifiers
is done independent of the particular type being unwrapped I won't bother
adding test cases for each one but at least demonstrate that this change was
necessary & sufficient to fix the bug.
llvm-svn: 173002
Adding the pseudo first parameter to a member function pointer's function type
and mark it as artificial.
Combined with a fix to GDB ( http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14998 )
this fixes gdb.cp/member-ptr.exp with Clang.
llvm-svn: 172911
it apart from [[gnu::noreturn]] / __attribute__((noreturn)), since their
semantics are not equivalent (for instance, we treat [[gnu::noreturn]] as
affecting the function type, whereas [[noreturn]] does not).
llvm-svn: 172691
The testcase in pr14929 shows that this is extremely hard to do. If we choose
to apply the attribute, that causes the visibility of some decls to change and
that can happen really late (during codegen).
Current gcc warns and ignores the attribute in this testcase with a warning.
This suggest that the correct solution is to find a point in the compilation
where we can compute the visibility and
* assert it was never computed before
* reject any attempts to compute it again in the future (with warnings).
llvm-svn: 172305
storage and thus is implicitly zero-initialized, no need to
do C++11 memory model. This patch unconditionally detects
such condition and zeroinitializer's the variable.
Patch has been commented on and OKed by Doug off-line.
// rdar://12897704
llvm-svn: 172144
Using added LLVM functionality in r171698. This works in GDB for member
variable pointers but not member function pointers. See the LLVM commit and
GDB bug 14998 for details.
Un-xfailing cases in the GDB 7.5 test suite will follow.
llvm-svn: 171699
Catch some cases I'd missed in r171605 related to unnamed parameters of record
type. This resolves all remaining cases of PR14573 suppression in the GDB 7.5
test suite. Fix to the test suite to follow.
llvm-svn: 171633
Referring back to the original commit (r115090) which was a frontend only test
I adjusted this test to verify the frontend change that was made, to emit the
protected access value in the flags metadata field.
llvm-svn: 171604
the body of a functions. The problem was that hasBody looks at the entire chain
and causes problems to -fvisibility-inlines-hidden if the cache was not
invalidated.
Original message:
Cache visibility of decls.
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171053
of a member function with parenthesized declarator.
Like this test case:
class Foo {
const char *(baz)() {
return __PRETTY_FUNCTION__;
}
};
llvm-svn: 170233
I wasn't sure where to put the test case for this, but this seemed like as good
a place as any. I had to reorder the tests here to make them legible while
still matching the order of metadata output in the IR file (for some reason
making it virtual changed the ordering).
Relevant commit to fix up LLVM to actually respect 'artificial' member
variables is coming once I write up a test case for it.
llvm-svn: 170154
both LE and BE targets.
AFAICT, Clang get's this correct for PPC64. I've compared it to GCC 4.8
output for PPC64 (thanks Roman!) and to my limited ability to read power
assembly, it looks functionally equivalent. It would be really good to
fill in the assertions on this test case for x86-32, PPC32, ARM, etc.,
but I've reached the limit of my time and energy... Hopefully other
folks can chip in as it would be good to have this in place to test any
subsequent changes.
To those who care about PPC64 performance, a side note: there is some
*obnoxiously* bad code generated for these test cases. It would be worth
someone's time to sit down and teach the PPC backend to pattern match
these IR constructs better. It appears that things like '(shr %foo,
<imm>)' turn into 'rldicl R, R, 64-<imm>, <imm>' or some such. They
don't even get combined with other 'rldicl' instructions *immediately
adjacent*. I'll add a couple of these patterns to the README, but
I think it would be better to look at all the patterns produced by this
and other bitfield access code, and systematically build up a collection
of patterns that efficiently reduce them to the minimal code.
llvm-svn: 169693
This was an egregious bug due to the several iterations of refactorings
that took place. Size no longer meant what it original did by the time
I finished, but this line of code never got updated. Unfortunately we
had essentially zero tests for this in the regression test suite. =[
I've added a PPC64 run over the bitfield test case I've been primarily
using. I'm still looking at adding more tests and making sure this is
the *correct* bitfield access code on PPC64 linux, but it looks pretty
close to me, and it is *worlds* better than before this patch as it no
longer asserts! =] More commits to follow with at least additional tests
and maybe more fixes.
Sorry for the long breakage due to this....
llvm-svn: 169691
generally support the C++11 memory model requirements for bitfield
accesses by relying more heavily on LLVM's memory model.
The primary change this introduces is to move from a manually aligned
and strided access pattern across the bits of the bitfield to a much
simpler lump access of all bits in the bitfield followed by math to
extract the bits relevant for the particular field.
This simplifies the code significantly, but relies on LLVM to
intelligently lowering these integers.
I have tested LLVM's lowering both synthetically and in benchmarks. The
lowering appears to be functional, and there are no really significant
performance regressions. Different code patterns accessing bitfields
will vary in how this impacts them. The only real regressions I'm seeing
are a few patterns where the LLVM code generation for loads that feed
directly into a mask operation don't take advantage of the x86 ability
to do a smaller load and a cheap zero-extension. This doesn't regress
any benchmark in the nightly test suite on my box past the noise
threshold, but my box is quite noisy. I'll be watching the LNT numbers,
and will look into further improvements to the LLVM lowering as needed.
llvm-svn: 169489
The count attribute is more accurate with regards to the size of an array. It
also obviates the upper bound attribute in the subrange. We can also better
handle an unbound array by setting the count to -1 instead of the lower bound to
1 and upper bound to 0.
llvm-svn: 169311
The count field is necessary because there isn't a difference between the 'lo'
and 'hi' attributes for a one-element array and a zero-element array. When the
count is '0', we know that this is a zero-element array. When it's >=1, then
it's a normal constant sized array. When it's -1, then the array is unbounded.
llvm-svn: 169219
non-trivial if they would not call a move operation, even if they would in fact
call a trivial copy operation. A proper fix is to follow, but this small
directed fix is intended for porting to the 3.2 release branch.
llvm-svn: 167920
This corrects the mangling and linkage of classes (& their member functions) in
cases like this:
struct foo {
struct {
void func() { ... }
} x;
};
we were accidentally giving this nested unnamed struct 'no' linkage where it
should've had the linkage of the outer class. The mangling was incorrecty too,
mangling as TU-wide unnamed type mangling of $_X rather than class-scoped
mangling of UtX_.
This also fixes -Wunused-member-function which would incorrectly diagnose
'func' as unused due to it having no linkage & thus appearing to be TU-local
when in fact it might be correctly used in another TU.
Similar mangling should be applied to function local classes in similar cases
but I've deferred that for a subsequent patch.
Review/discussion by Richard Smith, John McCall, & especially Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 167906
If we have a type 'int a[1]' and a type 'int b[0]', the generated DWARF is the
same for both of them because we use the 'upper_bound' attribute. Instead use
the 'count' attrbute, which gives the correct number of elements in the array.
<rdar://problem/12566646>
llvm-svn: 167807
- In C++11, perform overload resolution over all assignment operators, rather than just looking for copy/move assignment operators.
- Clean up after temporaries produced by operator= immediately, rather than accumulating them until the end of the function.
llvm-svn: 167798
Do this by making the mangleNumber(APSInt) overload look like
the int64_t version. (The latter should probably just delegate
to the former).
Test from Evgeny Eltsin!
llvm-svn: 167599
at whether the *selected* constructor would be trivial rather than considering
whether the array's element type has *any* non-trivial constructors of the
relevant kind.
llvm-svn: 167562
checks to enable. Remove frontend support for -fcatch-undefined-behavior,
-faddress-sanitizer and -fthread-sanitizer now that they don't do anything.
llvm-svn: 167413
test/CodeGenCXX/member-alignment.cpp. The test succeeds for
powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu. If other flavors of powerpc are
shown by buildbots to still be broken, we can adjust the test
at that time.
llvm-svn: 167143
doesn't include padding up to the alignment of the record, take this
as a cue that the alignment of the record should (conservatively) be
set to 1. This is similar to other the other cues we use to determine
that the record has a lower alignment, e.g., that the
externally-supplied layout places fields at lower offsets than we
would. Fixes <rdar://problem/12582052>; test case in LLDB.
llvm-svn: 166824
will be represented in the IR as a plain "i32" type. This causes the
tests to spuriously fail on platforms where int is not a 32-bit type,
or where the ABI requires attributes like "signext" or "zeroext" to
be used.
This patch adds -triple or -target parameters to force those tests
to use the i386-unknown-unknown target.
llvm-svn: 166551
initialized by a reference constant expression.
Our odr-use modeling still needs work here: we don't yet implement the 'set of
potential results of an expression' DR.
llvm-svn: 166361
constructors.
When I first moved regparm support to TargetInfo.cpp I tried to isolate it
in classifyArgumentTypeWithReg, but it is actually a lot easier to flip the
code around and check for regparm at the end of the decision tree.
Without this refactoring classifyArgumentTypeWithReg would have to duplicate
the logic about when to use non-byval indirect arguments.
llvm-svn: 166266
are no known current users of column info. Robustify and fix up
a few tests in the process. Reduces the size of debug information
by a small amount.
Part of PR14106
llvm-svn: 166236
This is consistent/interoperable with GCC 4.7 (& __cxa_deleted_function isn't
present in 4.4 - not sure when it got added, but you'll need something with
that function available for this to work).
llvm-svn: 166069
AAPCS ABI Section 7.1.4 [1] specifies that va_list
should be defined as struct __va_list { void *__ap;};
And in C++, it is defined in namespace std.
[1] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic
/com.arm.doc.ihi0042d/IHI0042D_aapcs.pdf
Patch by Weiming Zhao.
llvm-svn: 165609
- outside C++, return undef (behavior is not undefined unless the value is used)
- in C++, with -fcatch-undefined-behavior, perform an appropriate trap
- in C++, produce an 'unreachable' (behavior is undefined immediately)
llvm-svn: 165273
This fixes a regression from r162254, the optimizer has problems reasoning
about the smaller memcpy as it's often not safe to widen a store but making it
smaller is.
llvm-svn: 164917
typeid (and a couple other non-standard places where we can transform an
unevaluated expression into an evaluated expression) is special
because it introduces an an expression evaluation context,
which conflicts with the mechanism to compute the current
lambda mangling context. PR12123.
I would appreciate if someone would double-check that we get the mangling
correct with this patch.
llvm-svn: 164658
enough information so we can mangle them correctly in cases involving
dependent parameter types. (This specifically impacts cases involving
null pointers and cases involving parameters of reference type.)
Fix the mangler to use this information instead of trying to scavenge
it out of the parameter declaration.
<rdar://problem/12296776>.
llvm-svn: 164656
be sure to delete the complete object pointer, not the original
pointer. This is necessary if the base being deleted is at a
non-zero offset in the complete object. This is only required
for objects with virtual destructors because deleting an object
via a base-class subobject when the base does not have a virtual
destructor is undefined behavior.
Noticed while reviewing the last four years of cxx-abi-dev
activity.
llvm-svn: 164597
into the enclosing scope; this is a more accurate model but is
(I believe) unnecessary in my test case due to other flaws.
However, one of those flaws is now intentional: blocks which
appear in return statements can be trivially observed to not
extend in lifetime past the return, and so we can allow a jump
past them. Do the necessary magic in IR-generation to make
this work.
llvm-svn: 164589
Make clang emit a flag for DW_AT_object_pointer for the artificial
args where it should (implicit first arguments). FileCheck-ize a
test as well and update tests to take into account the object
pointer flag.
rdar://9797999
llvm-svn: 163755
args where it should (implicit first arguments). FileCheck-ize a
test as well and update tests to take into account the object
pointer flag.
rdar://9797999
llvm-svn: 163668
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
by this mode, and also check for signed left shift overflow. The rules for the
latter are a little subtle:
* neither C89 nor C++98 specify the behavior of a signed left shift at all
* in C99 and C11, shifting a 1 bit into the sign bit has undefined behavior
* in C++11, with core issue 1457, shifting a 1 bit *out* of the sign bit has
undefined behavior
As of this change, we use the C99 rules for all C language variants, and the
C++11 rules for all C++ language variants. Once we have individual
-fcatch-undefined-behavior= flags, this should be revisited.
llvm-svn: 162634